The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 120, Ed. 2 Monday, November 27, 1933 Page: 8 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Daily Herald, Brownsville and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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GOLD PRICE
MAINTAINED
AT NEW NARK
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t*T toft! 'belt ft doeosrem hi »t»
Waft. A «e^VI fit S?W A pHMtt f.
I** 4 rtsvM.ied to connrm S?tiy cw
KniQaL
Acheeon reported to be in tits
Connecticut home was knotn to
have considered the plan illegal. His
recent departure was regard 'd ns
proof of his lack of sympathy in the
project.
Movie Sidelights
CAPITOI
AU too seldom a picture of great
beauty and power with a theme
which strikes a responsive cord In
the hewrt of every beholder comes
to the screen. But such s film Is
now seen In "One Mans Journey”
BKO Radio Picture which Shows
Tuesday and Wednesday at your
Capitol.
Lionel Barrymore Is starred and
In characterising the typical coun-
try doctor he rises to the greatest
heights of his long and brilliant
career Dorothy Jordan Joel Mc-
Crea Prances Dee and May Rob-
son contribute Impressive perform-
ances.
"One Man’s Journey” tells ef-
fectively and entertainingly a story
of a great man who considers him-
self a failure. Eli Watt with his
■mail son Jimmy starts practice
aimoet disastrously when Letty
McOinnb Is born by losing the
mother. As the years pass his
practice builds mainly w the form
ot charity cases. Jimmy becomes
a surgeon and Ell becomes the com-
munity s hero with some spectac-
ular achievements.
Miss Jordan gives the finest per-
formance of her promising career
as Leuy. while the veteran May
Robson never has appeared to bet-
ter advantage than she does as
Ella housekeeper McCrea is out-
standing as the actor's son. and
Miss Dee is effective in a brief
role a* McCrea's fiancee.
QUEEN
Oripping melodrama of an eider-
!v spinster from an old ladies' home
who is adopted by a young man in
need of a mother to save him
from a prison sentence. “Bachelor
Mother” new screen hit at the
Queen Theatre Tuesday and Wed-
nesday
Playing the elderlv spinster in
the title role is Margaret Seddon.
and it Is about her efiorts to save
her adopted son from the clutches
of an unscrupulous blonde gold-
digger that the plot revolves.
in the starring roles are pretty
Evalyn Knapp and handsome James
Murray.
Mr». Taylor Leaves
For Austin Meeting
Mrs. Voiney W. Taylor president
of the State Tederatlon of Wo-
mens clubs will leave tonight ior
Austin where she will represent the
federated clubs tomorrow at a meet-
ing on the national movement for
the relief of human misery.
The atat« meeting was called by
Mrs. Margaret Conger state chair-
man of tlib move.
PLANE PASSENGERS
Leaving Sunday on Pan American
plane were D. J. Mallett and D. G.
Richardson for Mexico ?uy and E.
H. Hcmandea for Tampico. Arriv-
ing from Mexico City Sunday weie
B A. Quiroz P Snick. I. Saideu-
berg and H. A. Savage. S. r. Redd.
W E .Schoemaker. L. M. Stone. Jack
Allen. J. R. Junt and R Eason ar-
rived from Tampico.
American Airways pajotngeis
leaving Sunday were Mrs. G. G.
Moffitt for Fori Worth. L. M Stone
for San Antonio; D. A Milligan.
Dallas. B. A. Quiroz. Houston; Paul
Snick. Dallas and Ted Tlmcannon
Port Worth.
Children's Coughs
Need Creomulsion
Always get the best fastest and
surest treatment for your child’s
cough or cold. Prudent mothers
mor' arid more arc turning to
Creomulsicn for any cough or cola
• Quit starts.
Creomulsion emulsifies creosote
with six other important medicinal
element which soothe and heal the
Inflamed membranes. It is not a
cheap remedy but contains no nar-
cotir. and is certain r *ief. Qet a
bottle from your druggist right
now and have M ready for instant
use. (advj
k
j TODAY’S MARKETS
....-_._.......
NEW YORK UTOCKS I
NEW YORK. Nov 27.--M’- The
flowers of inflation seemed to hare
lost some more of their speculative
bloom today and stocks and staples
FREE BORDER
ZONES STUDIED
Establishment of free
around Mexican bonier clues in the j
event the prevent experimental mote
rt Afftta Caltente and Tla Juana
ROWS successful is considered pas- |
stbie. according to Ruben M«r-1
;?ner president of the Mtttoraors
; chamber of commerce.
Marlines said that he oax not
filed request for such a son* but
t*m been m communication with tfie
federal government and has ex- ;
pressed the belief that the Mexi-
can government will establish such
! ports of entry at Matamoros. Rev- I
! nasa. Nuevo Larfldtv and other bor-
; der cities.
The free zone war. tried Along the
entire border during the Dt*u re-
gime !t was abandoned because of
wholesale smuggling from ‘he tree
eone into the interior.
The free rw plan now includes
a city and a certain territory around
IL
(Continued Prom Page One)
lence to hang for the murder of
his attractive wife Allene at Stan-
ford University the uiob laid hands
upon the whimpering Thurmond
dragging him to the street and
i raining blows upon him.
Holmes struggled as he was
dragged from the cell that once had
held Douglas Templeton now serv-
I mg s life sentence for the murder
I oi his aunt. Likewise he was drag-
ged out and beaten.
Crowd ineere Approval
Cheers jeers and catcalls trom
thousands of watchers became the
death march of Thurmond and
Holmes. Down the alley between
the court house and the partially
constructed postoffice and across
tire street in the palm fringed park
they were dragged. Officers who
had given up the fight were closed
out oi the picture as the approving
thousands lined the bordering
streets.
The mob selected the limb of a
tall tree looped a rope about the
unconscious Thurmond’s neck and
hoisted him a loll while the crowd
whooped its approval. The clothing
was torn from the lower part oi
the body and he hung there half
clad.
The business of choosing a limb
for Holmes required about 10 min-
utes. A tree some 200 yards irom
where Thurmond was dangling was
finally selected. He was stripped oi
all clothing and jerked upward.
Street lights and flashlights shed-
ding intermittent gleams through
the leaves gave the scene a peculiar
ghastliness. The crowd augmented
by thousands who had emerged from
the theaters just in time to witness
the gruesome climax quieted. Pho-
tographers whose equipment had
been sei»d in the earlier stages of
the spectacle were not molested.
Bodice t at Down
The body of Thurmond was cut
down finally and the crowd swarm-
ed into the park to break souvenir
twigs from the hanging limb. The
assembled thousands were beginnin g
to drift away when tne oocty of
Holmes was taken down.
Hours after the lynching the tear
gas still hung about the Jail like
a sinister veil. The floors of the
building were filled with wreckage
Two steel barred doors that had
been smashed were barely* hanging
on their hinges and the heavy pipes
that had served as battering rams
lay In a corridor
Not an arrest was made. The only
shots that were fired with the c§
ception of the charges from tear
gas guns and bombs were the two
that started the attack on the jail.
Sheriff* Enr.ig. after recovering
consciousness stood by helpless
until the crowd had wreaked Ks
vengeance. Then he went to a
hospital for treatment. Howard
Buffington a deputy who was struck
irom behind while pleading with
the mob and state highway patrol-
man Nick Glander also received
emergency treatment. Several per-
sons were struck by flying missiles
or burned by tear gas bursts.
'Good Lesson’ Says Governor
Ear her in the evening in Sacra-
mento when Gov. James Rolph
Jr. was asked if he would call out
National Guardsmen to reinforce
the officers the chief executive
said:
"What call out the troops to
protect those two guys? That’s the
sheriff’s job."
Informed later that Thurmond
and Holmes had been lynched Rolph
said:
"This is the best lesson that
California has ever given the
country. We showed the country
that the state is not going to
tolerate kidnaping.**
The lynching was the first in
California in 13 years. The last
time a mob took the law into Its
own hands was December 10 1920
v hen George Boyd. Terance Pitts
and Charles Valento. San Fran-
cisco gangsters accused of killing
three police oilicers. were hang?
from a tree auer being draggeu
from the Sonoma county jail at
Santa Rosa.
Man Goes on Trial
For Slaying Pair
TYLER Nov. 27. MV-Bamey
Blackshear s second trial on & mur-
der charge growing out of the bru-
tal killing of an elderly German
couple. Mr. and Mrs. George T.
Brimberry at their rude saotai In
the oil field near Arp. was set to
open here today.
The oil field roustabout was tried
last May 8 for the slaying of Mrs.
Viola Briir.berry and was sentenced
to death. He appealed and the ver-
dict was reversed the case being
remanded for trial. He has never
been tried for the killing of Brim-
berry although indicted in both
slipped to lower levels in rather
dull trading.
Currency stabilization hopes were
given further encouragement by
the fact that the RJ\C. again
failed to boost the domestic gold
rate. The British pound slumped
some 12 cents and the French franc
was down about .14 a cent. Grains
cotton rubber and silver future*
sagged. There were some resistant
equity spots notably the alcohols
but the metals werq heavy along
with a number of Industrial spe-
cialties. U. &■ government securities
again moved up substantially.
Shares up fractionally included
National Distillers Scheme}. Amer-
ica!! Commercial Alcohol and U S
Industrial Alcohol. Homestake Min-
ing dropped 7 U. S. Smelting 5.
while losers of a point or more in-
cluded McIntyre Dome and Cerro
de Pasco. Case and Western Union
yielded 4 points and International
Harvester and Allied Chemical lost
more than 2. American Telephone
U S. Steel Consolidated Gas. Sears
Roebuck Johns-Manvllle General
Motors Chrysler and Westinghouse
shoved recessions of fractions to 2
or more.
Wall Street opinion despite jumpy
price fluctuations was mildly op-
timistic. While the public general-
ly was still on the outside looking
in some odd-lot brokers reported
a lair amount of purchases for cash
on the various dips
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS Nov. 27.—(4FV-
Cotton had an easier opening to-
day. While Liverpool was about as
due. sterling was weak. 'There was
no change in gold. Trading which
appeared to have shifted entirely to
later months was only moderate
and first trades showed losses of 3
to 7 points.
The t*«4iward trend of sterling
rather indifferent stocks and lack
of buying support caused prices to
ease further after the start March
trading down to 9113 and JiHy to
10-23. or 11 points under Saturday s
close.
At the end of the first half hour
the market was soft and at the
lows.
Cotton ruled quiet and easy all
morning. Weakness of sterling and
unsettlement in the foreign money
and political situation prompted
liquidation mainly in the late
months near options being prac-
tically inactive. March traded as
low as 9.83 and July at 10.12 down
21 to 22 points from Saturday’s
close.
At noon the market was quiet
but had recovered one to two points
from the lows on a little short
covering.
CHICAGO GRAIN
CHICAGO. Nov. 27.—<*>— Grain
prices underwent decided new set-
backs early today. In the main
selling was associated with absence
of any official statement regarding
the Washington administration’s
I iuture financial policy. Opening
unchanged to 1 1-8 lower wheat
afterward declined all around. Corn
started 1-4 to 3-8 off. and sub-
sequently receded further.
POLICE HUNT
0 KILLER
WACO. Nov. 27. (flb—An uniden-
j tilled negro wa.% sought tocfciv feu*
the mysterious murder ol Mrs. Reba
(Carney 33. wrho came here with a
party from Kcnnedale on a noc-
turnal hunt for buried treasure.
Mrs. Carney was shot in the head
as she sat in her parked car a short
1 distance from the spot where $800
i in cash was supposed to have been
concealed. With her in the car was
a son. Fred. 13.
Another son. Bobbie. 12. and a
friend of the family. C O. Whitlock
of Fort Worth had left the car
1 shortly before to dig for the money.
| Police were told by Fred that a
negro walked by the car and then
I came back. Mrs. Carney flashed a
| light on the man. who fired at her
t with a pistol.
The boy said he threw his pocket
l knife at the negro. The knife was
found 6y officers at the scene of
the killing.
Whitlock said he had information
from an acquaintance that the
j money was buried between two
railroad tracks in east Waco. Alter
! locating the place Saturday after-
! noon he said they relumed after
dark to dig for the money. Mrs.
Carney was to have shared in what-
ever was found.
2.000 See Products
At Valley Exposition
(Special to The Herald)
EDINBURG Nov. 27.—More than
2.000 visitors attended the first an-
nual Valley-Made Products Expo-
sition staged here Friday and Sat-
urday by the Edinburg Community
Club in the Edinburg Chamber of
Commerce building.
None but products made entirely
in the Lower Rio Grande Valiev
were on exhibition and these in-
cluded more than a score of articles
produced by 24 manufacturing con-
cerns. The articles ranged from bees
and honey to petroleum products
including food clothing furniture
candy.
FLASHES OF LIFE
By Associated Press
Cora on the Knob
GREENSVURG. Pa — While
husking coni Clair Kelley of New
Alexandria saw a rabbit. He hurl-
ed an ear of com at the animal
popped It between the ears ind
killed It.
No Joke *
CHICAGO—Four men seen
running around different parts ol
Chicago with nothing to protect
them from a snowstorm but their
underwear weren’t doing It as a
lark they explained Individually
to police.
Each had been held up by ban-
dits who turned them loose after
stripping them down in the early
hours of the Sabbath.
One of the victims. Harry Flynn
said six men riding in an auto-
mobile hailed him with the fam-
iliar legion convention cry cf
“where’s Elmer?" then they pulled
him into the car. robbed him of
81.80 and his clothes.
•
RUSSIA PLANS
LONE HAND
WORLD MARTS
LONDON Nov. 27.—<JP>—Russia’s
determination to play a lone hand
in world markets current "distress
selling.” bumper European crops
and the difficulty of getting ac-
curate information on the operation
of the new wheat pact were prob-
lems tackled with fresh vigor by the
world wheat commission today.
Won't Give Up
At this meeting Russia was ex-
pected to be less obdurate toward
the effort to bring her into the
gentlemen’s agreement for the in-
ternational control of wheat ex-
ports than she was two months ago
when the agreement for the year
1933-1934 was drawn.
There was Indication however
that Russia would be ready to give
up her demand that her quota of
37.000.000 bushels be doubled.
Wheat export quotas for other
leading wheat producers as fixed
last summer were Canada. 200-
000.000 bushels; Argentina 110.000-
000; Australia 106.000.000 and the
United States 47.000.000.
It was learned that the world
wheat situation wax discussed at
least briefly by Pres. Roosevelt and
Maxim Litvlnoff at Washington. It
remained to be seen whether Amer-
ican recognition would affect the
soviet government's stand.
Delegates representing the big
four wheat growing nations were
not worried because the price still
is materially below the 63.08 gold
cents a bushel figure when Im-
porters promise to ease tariffs. The
current slump is described as sea-
sonal and aggravated by the selling
of Danubian and other crops. They
asserted they never have counted
on having the barriers lifted for at
least a year.
Wher Problem Dark
The United States b represented
by Ambassador Robert W. Blngnam
at London and John Van Antwerp
MacMurray. minister of Latvia.
Estonia and Lithuania.
Ambassador Bingham presided m
the morning session as the 25 dele-
gates and experts heard a report
by A. Cairns of Canada secretary
of the conference on his tour of
European wheat exporting coun-
tries.
As they recessed for lunch the
delegates generally expressed the
opinion that world wheat market
conditions were "not at all promis-
ing” because the problem of over
production was still unsolved.
GAS FAILED
Continued From Page One)
the lynchers rushed up ana grabbed
I him by the neck and told bins to
shut up. Another fellow cracked
him in the Jaw.
“Holmes went down and when he
got to his feet another man hit
him and another until he lay
sprawled at their feet unconscious.
“They pulled him to his feet and
stood him against the wall still
unconscious while others kept hit-
ting him in the face with their
fists. They finally put a rope around
his neck and dragged him head firsi
down the steps.
"Then they went up on the tbird
flow and found Thurmond banging
by his hands to the iron grating of a
i high window inside the lavatory
where he thought they wouldn’t aw
I him.
“He didn’t try to deny his identity
! but he came out sniveling and his
face was very white. I have nevei
seen human bemgs look so ten trice
as Holmes ami Thurmond.
“Thurmond kept repeating ’don'i
string me up. For God's sake don’i
string me up.’ And they hit him a<
they did Holmes and dragged ntm
down the steps with a rope around
his neck.
“They took both men acrosg Um
street threw the rope ends ovei
tree limbs and Jerked them roughly
off their feet to die.
“There were women and children
in the crowd and they saw that
whole think in the park. Some ol
of the children were babies in theta
mothers’ arms.
"I heard a number of womer
laugh even after it was all over
and say It had been a good •’hing.
“That mob seemed to be insane
The tear gas never faaed them. They
came through It with eyes streaming
and smarting but determined to get
those men and lynch them—that
was all that mob cared about.”
Search for Barrow
Turns to. Dallas
DALLAS. Nov. 37. CP)—Search foi
Clyde Barrow gunman who shot hta
way out of an officers’ trap last
week centered today In the Dallsuv
Fort Worth area after authorities
received report* of his being seer
in this vicinity.
Arthur Wesley a negro told ol
being stopped in wooded Dallas sub-
urb by a man asking directions to
a certain side road. The negro said
the man. who brandished a ma-
chine gun. boasted he was Barrow
youthful desperado wanted for sev-
eral killings and various robberies.
New Cabinet Faces
Emptying Treasury
PARIS. Nov. 27. <JPi—a fast- em-
ptying treasury widespread protest
meetings and miners’ ’work and
bread' demonstrations greeted the
new cabinet of Premier Camille
Chautemps today.
The members took office early
this morning after formal presenta-
tion to Pres. Albert LeBrun
No sooner had they officially en-
tered office than Finance Minister
Georges Bonnett told Bank of
France officials that the govern-
ment could meet Its &bts only un-
til Dec. 15.
Wife Slaying Case
Testimony Begina
LIVINGSTON. Nov. 27. Pb-A
statement in which J. A. Duce pur-
portedly admitted slaying his wife
and rolling her body In a hog wal-
low featured the state s case against
the «-vear-old east Texas logging
contractor scheduled to go on trial
for murder here today.
AT PREVIEW
Joan Crawford and Clark (table
In a scene from the new hit with
music "Dancing Lady" showing
Capitol with a preview Saturday
next Sunday and Monday at your
night 10 p. m.
FIREMEN TO
GET TRAINING
McALLEN. Nov. 27.—Two schools
of instruction for members of vol-
unteer fire departments in the Low-
er Rio Orande Valley early In
December have been arranged
through co-operation of the Fifth
District. Texas Volunteer Firemen's
Association. Including the Valley
departments and the state associa-
tion's training school at Texas A.
i M. College.
Announcement concerning the
school was made in a letter re-
ceived by Chief Raj Landry of Mis-
sion. who is alsd cnief of the Fifth
District. H. R. Brayton. head of the
aepartment of chemistry and chem-
ical engineering at A. & M. college
is also director of the annual state
firemen’s training school held ev-
ery August at College Station ana
announced completion of plans for
the Valley instruction.
The schools will be conducted by
Director Brayton and Chief Franx
Williams of Winters Texas who
has Just been named field instruc-
tor for the state association and
who will conduct similar schools in
other districts of the state associa-
tion.
Firemen from all Valley depart-
ments west of Weslaco will attend
the school to be held In McAllen
on the nights of December 5. 8 ana
7. while departments from Mer-
cedes east will meet on the nrhts
of December 8. 9 and 11 at Harlin-
gen for similar instruction. Each
night session will last four hours
giving ample opportunity Tor a
study of all phases of fire depart-
ment work.
Chief C. H Britton of McAllen
secretary of the Fifth District As-
sociation. advised Director Brayton
that plans had been completed In
the Valley for the schools. The an-
nual firemen’s school at College
Station resuted from a campaign
started by chiefs of the alley dis-
trict In 1927. It is conducted with
funds provided by legislative ap-
propriation.
Tournament Bridge
Scores Announced
The score in the Duplicate Bridge
Tournament Friday evening follows:
East-west: Kelly-Hamilton. -123:
Hassell-Sassell 227; Hodge-Hicks.
531; Watkins-Bogel 29: Bledxw-
Collins. -56 and Yates-Yates. -41
North-south: Moore - Biancke
-117; Mullen-Bingham -274; L*ng-
ner-Wathan. -189: Rice-Larson. 35;
Huey-DfGroot -82 and Ernst-
Erpst *50.
The average scow* for east-west
was 4 94 1-2 and for north-south.
-94 1-2 The tournament will be held
again Friday evening Dec. 1 but
thereafter It will be held on Thurs-
day evenings. Those entering the
tournament now may do so and
compete for the grand prise or may
come and play for only an evening
A prise Is awarded each evening and
a grand prize will be awarded on
the basis of the total of the highest
scores for four evenings play in
the tournament.
Chicago Stock Yard
Employes on Strike
CHICAGO. Nov. 27. MV-8tnking
employes of the Chicago Union
stock yards today caused a virtual
cessation of the livestock market.
Only about 800 men were on
strike the handling crew. Trains
and trucks poured in as usual but
1 there was no method of getting
them unloaded except for the lew
head that salesmen for commission
house were able to drive out of the
can.
Chie Is Found To
Slaying of Woman
SHERMAN. Nov. 27. MV-J. Ben-
ton Davis sheriff announced to-
day that two shotguns loaded were
found in a pool in a creek near the
home of Miss Antonia Bachman
slain during an attempted robbery
of her farm home a week ago.
The guns were found in a spot
pointed out in a statement by
Johnnie McCoy of Jay. Okla. Bill
Buchanan charged with murder
with McCoy also made a statement.
Stop Gaa Pains! German
Remedy Gives Relief
Acting on BOTH upper and low-
er bowels Adlerlka washes out all
poisons that cause gas. nervous-
ness and bad sleep. One dose gives
relief at once. Sold in Brownsville
by Eagle Pharmacy and Cisneros
Drug Store— In Rto Hondo by
Davidson Drug Co. Adv.
Optometrist—Eyes Examined
Glasses Fitted
1119 EUnue*b - !i ownsvtUe
Pham 944
C OF C PLANS !
TRADES DAY
FOR N’ALLEN
—
iSpecial to The Herald)
MCALLEN. Nov. 25—Plana for a
! greater McAllen Chamber of Com-
j merce had resulted Saturday from
the unanimous spirit of co-operation
! evinced by nearly 150 McAllen oual-
| ness men and civic leaden at the
| first annua] banquet of the cham-
ber of commerce organiation.
To Augment Funds
A move to augment funds receiv-
ed by the chamber of commerce
| from a tax of one mill on the $100
! valuation of city property by pub-
lic subscription to the organisation’s
| support has been well received
throughout the city according to J
J. Raidt president of the chamber
j of commerce. Committees probably
will be appointed immediately to
determine the approximate amount
which will be made available month-
ly for chamber of commerce work
through subscription.
Probably the first result of the
' increased revenue will be the em-
; ployment of a full-time manager
j for the chamber tt was intimated.
‘ but no definite action concerning
i the matter will be taken immediate-
ly.
Herman H. Ochs president of the
San Antonio Chamber was the
principal speaker He told McAllen
business men that "chambers of
j commerce need men.” and tha* the
j general need today was "spiritual
j reconstructonan iprti.
| reconstruction and not economic re-
t construction."
Ray S. Leeman. manager of the
| South Texas Chamber also of San
Antonio urged every cittsen of the
city to support the efforts and ac-
j tlvity of the organisation. He ex-
I plained some work of the regional
chamber of which the McAllen or-
ganisation is a member.
Plan Trades Days
John T. Lomax director of the
McAllen commerce body announc-
ed another of a series of trades
day events being staged by the or-
ganisation for Nov. 16 R E. Horn
I pioneer McAllen business man.
| chamber of commerce enthusiast
and now a director of the local or-
; ganisation. traced the history of the
j McAllen Chamber of Commerce
' from 1920 to the present time The
j first work of the first chamber ot
commerce in McAllen was installa-
tion of a watering-trough for horses
belonging to visitors who came to
j the city in the early days. The old
watering-trough has been preserved
and is now situated near the build-
chamber of Commerce
ing which now houses the McAllen
City Briefs |
Curve blade pruning saws. $1.19
Pruning shears Brownsville Hard-
ware.—Adv
B W. Harrison of Dallas was a
week end visitor in the city.
Among Austin callers in the city
are V. A. Stovall anil S. Setter-
white.
J. P Sampson of San Antonio is
a busines scalier in Brownsville.
%
Here from Corpus Chrtsti Sundav
was L. R. Johnson
Mum R. T. Plummer is in Browns-
ville from Austin.
Cash for your furniture. Col. Bad-
en. Harlingen— Adv.
A. Fuessell and J. E. Jordon of
San Antonio are among the visitors
in the city for a few days.
J. W. Allen was here Sunday
from Donna
W Cannan of San Antonio is
spending a short time in Browns-
ville.
Here from Houston are A. E. Riley
and George Strickland.
R. M Sanders was in the city
Sunday from Harlingen.
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
CASH—CASH paid for furniture
merchandise machinery livestock.
Col. Baden the auctioneer. Ar-
royo Bridge. Harlingen. Auction
every Tuesday. S-121
ll 1 ==
The Cleaners
of Brownsville
• are now on a
Minimum Price Basis Fixed by
the U. S. Government
Effective Monday Nov. 27th the Mtowtiif
prices have been fixed by the National Code
Authority for the Cleaning and Dying trade:
MEN’S SUITS CC. j
Cleaned and Preaaed ...
LADIES’ PLAIN DRESSES 1
These prices are now In effect and selling
below’ minium will be in viola ion «»f code
AMERICAN CLEANERS AND DYERS
j BROWNSVILLE TAILORING CO
GUZMAN TAILOR SHOP
MELTON CLEANERS AND HATTERS
MODEL LAUNDRY 4fc DRY
CLEANING CO. INC
TADEY TAILOR SHOP
ROMANTIC
James Murray «wf Iwlyn *
Knapp :ft a norm (ran tlv s*w :
picture 'BicJwtor Itother" it
the Queen meat*? T.«i»y a»c I
Wednescby.
SAUNDERSES |
BROKE AGAIN
MEMPHIS. lb** Nm. "ft.
Clarence Satmdrrr la heeler at*## -
but he zayd be'f «Q8 raw Write*.
Twioe before tie ran * '*jfu» t:
string'* i ito a uattow-wttSii efc-sto j
i of •elf-s*'TVj« gfoeety ftore* tv
! today hi.* Mwn afreet «ky* here
which little more tiutt a yv»* ag> w>
predicted wmW to air baa Hurts la *
tune wa* do*ed.
He told the pubcit about it it? tbd I
same personal way he dWWrtftl h:t
success and MbatnHit *
with the • piggiy WlgflF** Mil \
ence Sauadets. aol* >inn of «sr
name” chain*.
The fim of Sn Muter- MO* *<rv j
store chi tot m Mvgljr WfW '
! which bttwrec ifttf sod JtoiSt be j
i developed into a 17tfifWSCb* i
. tlon open Mag T#t» aagtcg ta .23# sH» ’
ies A wisely-hrrtOdeg Dtok w»*h
Wall Street MM!!<f| to tiaf krapfe? i
I and the law «f hi* turk a tv. <*n-
000 fortuie and a !r.?ItJt.vj
home.
Soon h»t announced be ta} t*-r» j
rowed IIIjOQQ to part *ha tHtofCO# 5
Saunders chain fit !san fa** wuj be
was offend ISteRXO# foe too »toW •
ing*. pro Id'.of he would »i out
of the gshVf} buainrs>». !t<‘?.ist*sj
to do tht*. hr was u. teaNtrtntcy
r din a y w inter.
I **i simp? ran oaf of *satt*. vtOft
! —mean ini' nwn e tapltolK-*® (1#f&*
ing the cepreaaion * Mvalm "did
today.
State Club Offices
Are Kitabliahed Here
State otiles** ntf the t« t d fed* ;
1 era t ion o* WoMfVt flit fa* am «e.
ling established to Bttywhsv lie. f©!**f
lowing tlvt fPrcCoo of )fn
i W. Taylor «*f this rtty aa* rCat* ;*?♦»-
j ident.
Offices Sot the stove wgstoaattoh ;
j have beet opened ip vm v■ato.ee •
| George & Sailor bvxtirjf wt fa* \
zabeth street wfmt- the awtowPs r?;
' the state argx^attiott ha*re beta ;
] sent.
WSUmm
Bright Eye#
No Boct Skin
I 8he teamed tea# tap
J often dull ejw. *-.:•*• > -as*
nervousness «eol ; .. v .
bowel *luggi Urmk* <u»! Vf«
Ml (Naum > luswff] M tear mcw
| sparkling lo/vt.un* jxm t**m te*.tS Sto t
more ineffw l«o f tar - *.j| rytot foe }«. • -#%. «
vegetable Mt r.»t-W> • gt*» tf oi*-w>{a • *. n#* ■
ins. gently s'.amWiflp tlv «nts;« ft >v< t
Millions take WfV ft*.* ttevsi ȣyettTW ;
relief from eevtipattete «4 Mjy* ;«*£■$
Get a 35c hoc.
All druggte^
1 ’kaK-an t—sa 4 t*
—and not ha'► ™~ 1
i h-fonoteng. _
«TI IkiC* Qtegb «id bracid
I UitiJ uw aurtbem.
Mg. gAfc » M M MM eUg Jug -gpM
f |1 5fc 4 L ' # I S| ; | ;: S t *1 '
^gm w*g * **r
lScty^iiiS^ll><i^Wi4*
' WhNftMb
j» M* a a . —
i ^ ^ ^ ^ . *'^ >''^'* f *.
.^■i.^ c- .'r ^ -.rv* ^t.^ 'I*~Vnfa 40
iTYwir iW-v^SlS
• v^'VmS'**t >rrv H..*-r-Y. «*►•’•• « vP»wflP%"wT*^P «^p
When 1m fnt HURT
Yos HURT til Overt
SPECIAL
Demonstration
TUESDAY
MovftnlKf M
$e# how tovy it it to
get rtlitf (tom tity
FOOT
trouble
If srai k»?it Stem yto fc«t Ftol
lOtMUfKtwgi
tlii* ifM.-Mil OnmmMMI •«*
«KMI riew* »5t» 19 •**!
ito wife yen* **?*«* **** ^ *s
«iK*« f«t< A* SL'^PSp?'
C^. w.p Su*n <rf £*• Wto Srtse^*1^
*xi«i js*-fe*l i*1* AutbarKJfc
«tU be hre« fc>f »he« totototoi*
vr«. T! - F>v*. T** .**1 *«*•*«•
^ -rUt rttmtec tlto *****
yjff (t^nisra wfer* LbopMIJIp
Ur. Sciv'U A&ri=iww •* w—y
ff **r1 ei» >-«r **♦*. %
ft'fit fan ml! £*<n «®t toetr cwv
lajiJ lfe» Mtvtt* V«t f>S f«f *• *1**
<rVr i^tonC btAl Alto*1*1
•wt <r^! be rfkft-lKj Wt
7Z AU •> * WITH X T PCjr
OK OKJOATtOH 1* yeol »*
g^rt tf* <i*t< eaci be *«* to
FREE! m
4Mi»*n*< tor eff £*«***
*»wvp*r ®* 11)
f■*«>:''* tm*+f*3*
tvt «MU«ftr «*r*r*1**
4*4 laKwlP
~~ n» ^
■ »“j* *—< -
ttoRtoRJ*1* I®®®*
I iHli
W £-brla « %*■*»
■ 1^
GUARANTEE
SHOE STORE
lilt Ett**b*tk I
SrowimflU
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The Brownsville Herald (Brownsville, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 120, Ed. 2 Monday, November 27, 1933, newspaper, November 27, 1933; Brownsville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1394794/m1/8/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .